Monday, September 3, 2012

AT&T to buy T-Mobile USA for $39 billion

AT&T Inc. said Sunday it will buy T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telekom AG in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $39 billion that would make it the largest cellphone company in the U.S.

The deal would reduce the number of wireless carriers with national coverage from four to three, and is sure to face close regulatory scrutiny. It also removes a potential partner for Sprint Nextel Corp., the struggling No. 3 carrier, which had been in talks to combine with T-Mobile USA, according to Wall Street Journal reports.

AT&T is now the country’s second-largest wireless carrier and T-Mobile USA is the fourth largest. The acquisition would give AT&T 129 million subscribers, vaulting it past Verizon Wireless’ 102 million. The combined company would serve about 43 percent of U.S. cellphones.

For T-Mobile USA’s 33.7 million subscribers, the news doesn’t immediately change anything. Because of the long regulatory process, AT&T expects the acquisition to take a year to close. But when and if it closes, T-Mobile USA customers would get access to AT&T’s phone line-up, including the iPhone.

The effect of reduced competition in the cellphone industry is harder to fathom. Public interest group Public Knowledge said that eliminating one of the four national phone carriers would be “unthinkable.”

“We know the results of arrangements like this — higher prices, fewer choices, less innovation,” said Public Knowledge president Gigi Sohn, in a statement.

T-Mobile has relatively cheap service plans compared with AT&T, particularly when comparing the kind that don’t come with a two-year contract. AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson said one of the goals of the acquisition would be to move T-Mobile customers to smart phones, which have higher monthly fees. AT&T “will look hard” at keeping T-Mobile’s no-contract plans, he said.

AT&T’s general counsel, Wayne Watts, said the cellphone business is “an incredibly competitive market,” with five or more carriers in most major cities. He pointed out that prices have declined in the past decade, even as the industry has consolidated. In the most recent mega-deal, Verizon Wireless bought No. 5 carrier Alltel for $5.9 billion in 2009.

Stifel Nicolaus analyst Rebecca Arbogast said the deal will face a tough review by the Federal Communications Commission and the Justice Department. She expects them to look market-by-market at whether the deal will harm competition. Even if regulators approve the acquisition, she added, they are likely to require AT&T to sell off parts of its business or T-Mobile’s business. Verizon had to sell off substantial service areas to get clearance for the Alltel acquisition.

To mollify regulators, AT&T said in a statement Sunday that it would spend an additional $8 billion to expand ultrafast wireless broadband into rural areas. Instead of covering about 80 percent of the U.S. population with its so-called Long Term Evolution, or LTE network, AT&T’s new goal would be 95 percent, it said. That means blanketing an additional area 4.5 times the size of Texas. The network is scheduled to go live in a few areas this summer, but the full build-out will take years.

The offer would help the FCC and the Obama administration meet their stated goals of bringing high-speed Internet access to all Americans. They see wireless networks as critical to meeting that goal — particularly in rural areas where it does not make economic sense to build landline networks.

AT&T said its customers would benefit from the cell towers and wireless spectrum the deal would bring. In some areas, it would add 30 percent more capacity, AT&T said.

“It obviously will have a significant impact in terms of dropped calls and network performance,” Stephenson said.

AT&T would pay about $25 billion in cash to Deutsche Telekom, Germany’s largest phone company, and stock that is equivalent to an 8 percent stake in AT&T. Deutsche Telekom would get one seat on AT&T’s board.

Like Sprint, T-Mobile has been struggling to compete with much larger rivals AT&T and Verizon Wireless, and its revenue has been largely flat for three years. Bellevue, Wash.-based T-Mobile USA’s subscriber count has stalled at just under 34 million, though it posts consistent profits.

Deutsche Telekom has been looking at radical moves to let it get more value out of its U.S. holding, including a possible combination with a U.S. partner.

There was a big hurdle to a T-Mobile USA-Sprint deal: The two companies use incompatible network technologies. The same hurdle would apply in a Verizon Wireless-T-Mobile USA deal. But the networks of AT&T and T-Mobile use the same underlying technology, so to some large extent, AT&T phones can already use T-Mobile’s network, and vice versa.

The deal has been approved by the boards of both companies. Dallas-based AT&T can increase its cash portion by up to $4.2 billion, with a reduction in the stock component, as long as Deutsche Telekom receives at least a 5 percent equity ownership interest in the buyer.

The agreement doesn’t leave room for other buyers to jump in with a higher bid, AT&T said.

AT&T would finance the cash part of the deal with new debt and cash on its balance sheet and will assume no debt from T-Mobile.

AP Technology Writer Joelle Tessler contributed to this report from Washington, D.C.

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Nokia Series 40 - Platform


Series 40 is the world's most widely used mobile platform: Hundreds of millions of Series 40 phones are in use every day.

Series 40 supports two app development environments. Java ME gives you the ability to create apps that require high performance, such as games; and Series 40 web apps, which are enabled through the Nokia Browser for Series 40, to offer straightforward delivery of web-centric applications with a rich user experience. Series 40 phones range from entry level products that provide many mobile consumers with their first Internet experience to high-performance, full-featured phones such as the Nokia Asha 311.

Currently, you can target over 150 phone models with Series 40 apps.

Source : Nokia Developer

Nokia Series 40




Series 40 offers you two great development technologies: Java and web apps. Choosing either gives you access to the world's most widely used mobile platform, with hundreds of millions of phones in use every day. The latest full touch Series 40 phones bring a smartphone-like experience to the mass market, complementing the range of Series 40 phones that deliver many mobile consumers their first internet experience.
By creating Java apps, you can offer users rich games and advanced personal and enterprise apps. You can also take advantage of the in-app purchasing and in-app advertising business models to increase the opportunities for generating revenue.
Series 40 web apps enable you to leverage your web properties and deliver them in a network-efficient way to a wide audience of Series 40 owners. In addition, the unique features of Series 40 web apps enable you to offer a rich user experience, with the ability to manipulate aspects of the user interface on the phone. You can monetize your web apps through pay-to-download on the Nokia Store or by adding in-app advertising.
Source : Nokia Developer

Google to buy Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion

Google Inc. is buying cell phone maker Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. for $12.5 billion in cash. It’s by far Google’s biggest acquisition to date and a sign the online search leader is serious about expanding beyond its core Internet business.

Google will pay $40.00 per share, a 63 percent premium to Motorola’s closing price on Friday.

Motorola Mobility was separated from the rest of Motorola in January. The company has remade itself as a maker of smartphones based on Google’s Android software, but has struggled against Apple Inc. and Asian smartphone makers.

“Motorola Mobility’s total commitment to Android has created a natural fit for our two companies,” said Google CEO Larry Page in a statement. “Together, we will create amazing user experiences that supercharge the entire Android ecosystem for the benefit of consumers, partners and developers.”

The acquisition has the approval of both companies’ boards and is expected to close by the end of this year or early 2012. It dwarfs Google’s previous biggest deal, the 2008 purchase of DoubleClick for $3.2 billion.

In premarket trading, shares of Motorola Mobility soared 60 percent, or $14.72, to $39.19. Shares of Google, meanwhile, fell $14.68, or 2.6 percent, to $549.95.


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Toshiba Satellite U925t: A Windows 8 Tablet With a Slide-Out Keyboard

The Windows 8 computers are here and they continue to get more interesting by the hour today. On the heels of Samsung's new Windows 8 devices, Toshiba is announcing its own sliding tablet with a Toshiba Keyboard -- the Satellite U925t. The company showed off a bit of it back in June, but today it is revealing more details about the tablet-turned-laptop.

Toshiba calls the U925t an ultrabook, and from a quick glance of the spec list it really does look just like a regular laptop. It has a Core i5 processor from Intel and an 128GB solid state drive. But see this computer for yourself and you'll very quickly realize that it isn't just another laptop.

When it's folded up it looks like a thick (.78 inches) tablet with a 12.5-inch screen, but you can then slide the screen up to reveal a full-size keyboard with a touch pad like the Toshiba Satellite M352 Keyboard. The entire package weighs 3.2 pounds, which is in line with many ultrabooks, but quite a bit heavier than most tablets.

I got a look at the device this week and found the sliding mechanism worked well. I also found the device sits nicely on one's lap; with the laptop keyboard out it didn't topple over while I sat with it in a chair.

It is heavy to hold in tablet mode, though. But, that said, the touchscreen was very responsive to my swipes across the Windows 8 Start Screen and from the edges to bring up other Windows 8 settings. My biggest issue with Windows 8 here was the presence of extra preloaded software on the Desktop. On the unit I saw, there was a WildTangent games program. (So much for thinking Windows 8 would bring an end to crapware.)

There's also another trick in the U926t -- a Near Field Communication (NFC) chip. Located in the palm rest, Toshiba says it will make it possible for users to tap the computer against other devices to transfer files. There is also a webcam on the front of the screen and a 3-megapixel camera on the back of the device when in tablet mode.

Toshiba isn't discussing the pricing of the Toshiba Satellite U925t yet with Toshiba Keyboard, but it says it will be available on Oct. 26 when Windows 8 officially hits.

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whereby the original author's information and copyright must be included.

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World Most Beautiful Woman


Defence seeks secure smartphones, tablets




The equipment entity under the Australian Defence Force is building a secure mobile communications system supporting tablets and smartphones, according to a request for information (RFI) published 21 August.

The Land Systems Division of the Defence Materiel Organisation (DMO), which develops fighter planes, satellites, tents and more for Defence, said it’s building the secure communications system for Special Operations Command (SOCOMD) users to access support system applications and services.

“The system seeks to use advances in mobile device..

Source : ComputerWorld

National security and smartphones




A Korean soldier belonging to the artillery division on the front lines of Gangwon Province was given his first leave. The first thing he did after arriving home was to look for his mobile phone. When his parents visited him at his camp, he had asked them to bring the phone with the battery fully charged.

He took his phone to the replacement training center but it was sent back home.

On his first leave, he read a Dong-A Ilbo article on military security information being leaked from the smartphones of soldiers. The story said soldiers were posting training photos and weapons on social networking sites. One posted a picture of armored cars on his Facebook account with the message, "I`ll be on a two-week tactical training session." Other soldiers secretly bring their smartphones to camp, and one who was discharged from the service said a third of soldiers have smartphones in the barracks.

Source : Donga

Google engineer finds British spyware on PCs and smartphones




Two security researchers have found new evidence that legitimate spyware sold by British firm Gamma International appears to be being used by some of the most repressive regimes in the world.
Google security engineer Morgan Marquis-Boire and Berkeley student Bill Marczak were investigating spyware found in email attachments to several Bahraini activists. In their analysis they identified the spyware infecting not only PCs but a broad range of smartphones, including iOS, Android, RIM, Symbian, and Windows Phone 7 handsets.

The spying software has the capability to monitor and report back on calls and GPS positions from mobile phones, as well as recording Skype sessions on a PC, logging keystrokes, and controlling any cameras and microphones that are installed.
They report the code appears to be FinSpy, a commercial spyware sold to countries for police criminal investigations. FinSpy was developed by..

Source : TheRegister

DHS warns of implanted medical device security vulnerabilities




Everyone is aware that smartphones can be hacked and are a potential source of security vulnerability for personal and private data. The Department of Homeland Security has issued a warning for medical devices and smartphones noting that the devices can expose patient data and lead to cyber security issues. The DHS issued alert titled Attack Surface: Healthcare and Public Health Sector earlier this month. 
The warning notes that medical devices and smartphones that connect to IT networks could pose a potential security threat. The security threat could lead to the spread of malware and the loss of data according to the bulletin. The loss of personal medical data could have dire consequences for healthcare providers under HIPAA.  

Source : Daily TECH

Smartphones: Our national obsession




Doug Wilson takes his smartphone everywhere.When the 28-year-old wakes up, he snatches the phone from the nightstand to read Twitter feeds and Facebook messages before he gets out of bed.

During the day, he tends to carry the iPhone 4 in his hand. Putting it in his pocket would be too risky, he said, because he might miss a photo opportunity -- like that crazy "rat tail" hairdo he saw at a fast-food spot recently. ("I was like, 'I've GOT to take a picture of this!'")


And at night, access to this on-all-the-time gizmo is arguably more important than ever. First, there's the dog. Wilson uses his phone's LED camera flash to guide his steps as he takes Lucy, a bichon frise, outside. "I live in Arkansas, so I don't want to step on a snake or anything," he said.

Then there's his wife, Ashlee, whom he accidentally impregnated one evening after forgetting to look at an iPod app that explains the details of the rhythm method.........

Source : CNN Tech

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